Saturday, January 23, 2010

Sex Scandals

Articles

CQ Researcher
Greenblatt, Alan. "Sex Scandals: Do the media pay too much attention to adultery?." CQ Researcher 20.3 (2010): 49-72.

From Thomas Jefferson to Tiger Woods, sex scandals have been a recurring feature of American life. Today, text messages and surveillance cameras have made it harder to keep affairs secret, and the proliferation of Web sites and cable TV shows means that a politician or celebrity who cheats is more likely than ever to be exposed. Politicians and clergy who preach “family values” have had their personal hypocrisy revealed. In the wake of scandal in recent years, governors have resigned, a president has been impeached and senators have been caught using prostitutes and soliciting in an airport men's room. Nevertheless, questions remain about the ethical and journalistic propriety of publicizing private acts. Does the public have a right to know about private affairs — especially when they are not related to official duties? Should the news media focus on more “serious” issues?From the CQ Researcher. Reprinted with permission from CQ Press.

Main Search Keywords:
media
sex*
scandal*
politician* or celebrit*

other possible keywords:
priva*
ethic*

EBSCOhost (three sample searches)
politician* and sexual behavior
(media* or press) and celebrit* and scandal*
media and sex* and scandal*

ProQuest
(sex*) AND (politician*) AND (scandal*) AND (media*)

Book
Scooped! : media miss real story on crime while chasing sex, sleaze, and... Google Book Preview (See Chapter 5)

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